Saturday, May 12, 2012

6 Asian Startups That Caught Our Eye This Week

startups weekly feature

In the last seven days, we have covered a couple of startups on Tech in Asia, specifically from China, Indonesia, and Singapore. This week, our team is also at GMIC 2012 to cover some interesting topics surrounding entrepreneurship, which are listed below.

For folks who are interested in investing or partnering with these startups, drop us an email — editors[at]techinasia[dot]com – anytime. No promises, but we’ll try our best to be the bridge.

And if you’re a tech startup based in Asia hoping to get featured, please send us your pitch here.


1. Wildby | Singapore


Kids tend to ask many different types of questions, sometimes too many for parents to be able to answer. One solution that can offer some help to parents is Wildby is a voice-controlled Android application specially catered for children.


2. Qeon | Indonesia


Qeon was recently launched at the Scusa Intercontinental Mid Plaza Hotel, Jakarta, where it also featured its first game, Shadow Company. Founded back in June of 2011, Qeon Interactive will focus on publishing games from Korea, Japan, China, and Taiwan into the Indonesian market.


3. Burpple | Singapore


Mixing photo-sharing with foodie fanaticism, the Singapore-based social food journal Burpple.com has launched its iPhone app after a few weeks in open beta.


4. UrbanIndo | Indonesia


UrbanIndo, the Indonesian online real estate marketplace, is the latest startup to slip into the East Ventures’ investment portfolio. This round of funding also sees Chandra Tjan of East Ventures joining UrbanIndo’s board of directors.


5. Julu Mobile | China


Online ad spending in China is at $9 billion – but mobile advertising spend occupies only eight percent of the pie. With more people spending more time on mobile, there is certainly a growing potential which Julu Mobile aims to tap into and transform the mobile monetization experience.


6. DouDou | China


This year at GMIC, a startup called DouDou took home the win for its app, a platform to facilitate communication between parents, kids, and teachers.


Related stories



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USA E-commerce Landscape & Trends

Josh Yang over at Harvard Business School put together a rather comprehensive overview of the US e-commerce landscape and trends as he sees it, for 2012. I haven’t had time to go over all of it, but I found it good enough to share. I’m sure Josh will get a couple of hiring opportunities after [...]
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The X factor in tech with Roshni Mahtani of Tickled Media

 Roshni Mahtani (Founder & CEO Tickled Media) Speaker at Echelon 2012

Roshni Mahtani (Founder & CEO Tickled Media) Speaker at Echelon 2012

Roshni Mahtani, CEO and founder of Tickled Media which publishes online magazines across Southeast Asia, will be part of the women panel at Echelon 2012 to touch on the topic “The X Factor in Tech.”

Tickled Media was recently certified as one of the world’s most democratic companies by WorldBlu and ranked among Singapore’s 10 hottest start-ups in 2012 by Singapore Business Review.

Born in 1983, this Singaporean entrepreneur and journalist is best known for launching the parenting website, theAsianparent.com in 2008, and family activity website, Kidlander.sg in 2011.

In the very same year, Roshni announced that Tickled Media had signed a contract with the Russian online publisher SUP Media to run its flagship product, LiveJournal in Asia.

“With the total e-commerce market estimated at S$1.6 billion this year, we are proud to see that LiveJournal transactions might represent a staggering 6% of that, re-affirming us as one of the largest e-commerce players in Singapore.”

Upon graduating, Roshni went straight into the interesting  world of media. At only 20 years old, she was the production assistant for Voiceovers Unlimited, an international animation production house. The following year, she became youngest production manager  in Singapore .

She climbed the ladder and secured a role as the head English script editor for One Piece, the world’s top selling Japanese manga publisher. She found her calling as a wordsmith and decided to pursue a career in journalism. She has written for renowned magazines such as Computerworld, CIO, Motherhood, GOLF, Teens and Readers Digest.

Ultimately, her passion for kids and parenting led her to start Tickled Media which operates web portals like theAsianparent.com and provides social media consulting, targeting Fortune 500 clients across Southeast Asia.

Roshni Mahtani (Founder & CEO Tickled Media) Speaker at Echelon 2012

Roshni Mahtani (Founder & CEO Tickled Media) Speaker at Echelon 2012

Tickled Media, a Singapore-based digital publishing house that operates LiveJournal, theAsianparent.com and Kidlander.com in several Asian markets, was recently selected as the first Singaporean operated company to be certified by WorldBlu, a company specialising in organisational democracy, as a globally recognized democratic workplace.

The company, which is supported by Tigris Capital Pte Ltd, a Singapore-based media investment fund, also handles innovative online campaigns for both local and multi-national companies in the region.

Roshni Mahtani (Founder & CEO Tickled Media) is one of the awesome speakers at Echelon 2012. This tech conference is a two-day, double-track event on 11 and 12 June 2012 with over 1,100 delegates, a demo pit of up to 50 regional startups per day and various workshops. Get your tickets now!


Link to full article

The X factor in tech with Roshni Mahtani of Tickled Media

 Roshni Mahtani (Founder & CEO Tickled Media) Speaker at Echelon 2012

Roshni Mahtani (Founder & CEO Tickled Media) Speaker at Echelon 2012

Roshni Mahtani, CEO and founder of Tickled Media which publishes online magazines across Southeast Asia, will be part of the women panel at Echelon 2012 to touch on the topic “The X Factor in Tech.”

Tickled Media was recently certified as one of the world’s most democratic companies by WorldBlu and ranked among Singapore’s 10 hottest start-ups in 2012 by Singapore Business Review.

Born in 1983, this Singaporean entrepreneur and journalist is best known for launching the parenting website, theAsianparent.com in 2008, and family activity website, Kidlander.sg in 2011.

In the very same year, Roshni announced that Tickled Media had signed a contract with the Russian online publisher SUP Media to run its flagship product, LiveJournal in Asia.

“With the total e-commerce market estimated at S$1.6 billion this year, we are proud to see that LiveJournal transactions might represent a staggering 6% of that, re-affirming us as one of the largest e-commerce players in Singapore.”

Upon graduating, Roshni went straight into the interesting  world of media. At only 20 years old, she was the production assistant for Voiceovers Unlimited, an international animation production house. The following year, she became youngest production manager  in Singapore .

She climbed the ladder and secured a role as the head English script editor for One Piece, the world’s top selling Japanese manga publisher. She found her calling as a wordsmith and decided to pursue a career in journalism. She has written for renowned magazines such as Computerworld, CIO, Motherhood, GOLF, Teens and Readers Digest.

Ultimately, her passion for kids and parenting led her to start Tickled Media which operates web portals like theAsianparent.com and provides social media consulting, targeting Fortune 500 clients across Southeast Asia.

Roshni Mahtani (Founder & CEO Tickled Media) Speaker at Echelon 2012

Roshni Mahtani (Founder & CEO Tickled Media) Speaker at Echelon 2012

Tickled Media, a Singapore-based digital publishing house that operates LiveJournal, theAsianparent.com and Kidlander.com in several Asian markets, was recently selected as the first Singaporean operated company to be certified by WorldBlu, a company specialising in organisational democracy, as a globally recognized democratic workplace.

The company, which is supported by Tigris Capital Pte Ltd, a Singapore-based media investment fund, also handles innovative online campaigns for both local and multi-national companies in the region.

Roshni Mahtani (Founder & CEO Tickled Media) is one of the awesome speakers at Echelon 2012. This tech conference is a two-day, double-track event on 11 and 12 June 2012 with over 1,100 delegates, a demo pit of up to 50 regional startups per day and various workshops. Get your tickets now!


Link to full article

China, India Deals Count For 1/4 Of Top 100 VCs On The Midas List 2012

Startup Asia Deals Help One-Quarter of the Top 100 VCs to Score on the Forbes Midas List 2012
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Startup Asia Deals Count in 1/4 of Forbes Midas List of 100 Top 100 VCs

What a difference it makes to have China and India included in the Forbes’ Midas List 2012.

Of the top 100 venture capitalists who scored in this annual ranking, 12 who have funded startups in China are new on the 2012 list from last year. Two VCs active in India emerged on the 2012 ranks.

DCM and IDG Accel were among those firms that excelled with the expansion of China to the mix in 2012. The inclusion of India this year propelled Accel India and Mayfield Fund in the 2012 rankings.

The list reflects the importance of China and India as emerging hotspots of technology innovation, as well it should! China and India accounted for 17% of the total venture capital invested in 2011. Overall, the 2012 rankings highlight the growing range of dealmakers globally who have become active in China and India over the past five years.

What the dealmaker rankings also factor in is the fast increase among their funded Chinese startups that have gone public in the U.S. over the past five years. Prominent on the list of the VCs portfolios are recently listed Chinese companies Renren, Tudou, HiSoft Tech, Dangdang, Bitauto, VanceInfo and Qihoo 360.

China’s Facebook-plus site, Renren, appears on four of the VCs’ portfolio of deals. Other Chinese deals that repeat on the deal list are outsourcing company HiSoft Tech and video sharing site Tudou. From India, travel sevice MakeMyTrip was notable among the deals made by the top-100 ranked VCs.

Perhaps next year’s list can take into account the post-IPO performance of the deals! Many of those recently listed companies noted above are trading below their IPO price.

Privately held companies in China and India mattered in the rankings of the top 100 as well. From China, among the prominently cited deals are GroupOn-like Lashou and gaming portal Duowan. From India, medical device maker Perfint and online retailer Flipkart from India are notably recognized.

Here’s my tally of the 12 VC newcomers in 2012 doing deals in China, in order of their rank.
See Startup Asia tally at Forbes.

Link to full article

South Korea, a New Social Entrepreneurship Hub of Asia

Tech start-up incubators have sprung up across the world, in a concerted effort to uncover the next Google or Facebook and make a lot of money. But in Seoul, the government is driving a big push towards funding and incubating not just tech start-ups, but also those that have a socially good element to them.

On the surface, Seoul looks and feels like a great place; it’s clean, well organized, has delicious food and great nightlife, addictive KPOP and good looking people. But below the surface, like every other country, Korea does have many social problems.  One of the biggest problems is very high youth unemployment, which now stands at 8.3% for people below 30 years old. High youth unemployment is a result of a cycle that is hard to stop. Many graduates without jobs, create more competition for jobs, making young people frustrated and forcing them back into education which is getting more expensive, causing more stress because they can’t afford to pay it off, plus Korea is already an expensive country to live in.

This of course creates a lot of headache for the government to manage.  In a creative way, the government is looking to other young people with an entrepreneurial spirit to solve these problems by establishing incubation centers. On offer are funding grants of around 30M Korean Won (USD$30K) per enterprise per year, office space and other services like mentoring and education.  Social enterprises also enjoy favourable tax treatment and bank loan interest rates.

Beyond solving the social problem of high youth unemployment, the South Korean government has a responsibility to undertake more social projects. One reason is because South Korea is a part of the OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) group of countries and has a quota to meet for number of social enterprises created. Another reason is that once upon a time, South Korea was a poor country. But after the recent four decades of rapid economic development, and some neglect for social welfare, it is time to make up for it. In some sense it has graduated from poor to rich country and now feels the need to give back to society.

Such incubators are popping up all over Korea. There are five alone in Seoul and around 21 in Korea in total.

In Seoul, I had the opportunity to visit one center called Social Enterprise Incubating Center. I chatted to Kyung Seok Yang from Social Cube, who operates the center. She explained there are three main types of social enterprises. One is those aimed at job creation, especially for South Korea’s youth. Secondly, there are those that employ people with disabilities or the elderly. Thirdly, it could be a mix of both. One example is an enterprise called WeCAN, which employs disabled people to make cookies and the profits go back to disabled people.

Another recent example is an enterprise called Cizion. Similar to Disqus, it is a social comments manager for blogs. At first I was confused how this could be a social enterprise but it became apparent. Since South Korea has such a strong entertainment industry, many people like to talk about celebrities like singers and actors. But some of this chatter is gossip and rumours which have a detrimental impact on the minds of celebrities who feel ashamed, leading some to even commit suicide. Therefore Cizion aims to filter out untrue comments, by creating a blacklist of commentors through Facebook or Twitter.

While at the Social Enterprise Incubation center I chatted with two start-ups being incubated there currently.

The first was Life Seed, a group aiming to support baby sitters. The problem with child services in South Korea is that the quality of government support is rather low quality and there is poor monetary compensation. Baby sitters in South Korea are mainly students, social workers or elders and many are untrained in how to properly handle babies or young children. Therfore Life Seed wants to provide an education system, teaching sitters how to baby sit and how to manage long term stress.  To also create a support structure, the enterprise wants to create an offline community that can share and learn from each other. The mission of Life Seed is to change the eco-system of child care where the government, teachers, parents and sitters can work together to improve the system. Life Seed is a four person team led by Han Kyung-Jin and Choi Eun-Joo.

The second was InnoCrowd, a freelancing platform for designers in South Korea, similar to Elance. Just walking around South Korea’s young hot spots like Hongdae, it is clear to see the groundswell of design talent. However, high youth unemployment is making it difficult for these people to get jobs or projects, meaning there is an excess supply of talent. To better utlize South Korea’s talent, InnoCrowd wants to connect creators from the graphics, engineering, UI/UX and Product fields to find willing demand from outside Korea like Japan, China and Taiwan. Businesses with projects can post a project, designers can apply to work on the project, and then the businesses can review and select the designers they want. Once selected, InnoCrowd will allocate Project Managers to oversee the completion of the project for a fee. InnoCrowd will charge per project and its size. Currently InnoCrowd is in the development phase and will launch in July in open beta. Co-founder and CEO, Sean Park leads a team of four and is aiming to secure government funding for arts and culture social enterprises. South Korea’s government wants to back such projects because they want their small to medium sized companies to be more internationally competitive and design competent.

One of the biggest challenges for social enterprise incubators is funding.  Unlike more transparent and easy to understand business like manufacturing, companies and venture capital firms don’t understand how to value social impact and therefore don’t know how to justify how much to give. Traditional manufacturing companies use a % of expenditure model to figure out how much money they need, but of course this can’t be applied in the same way to social enterprise start-ups. Such a challenge remains a bottle neck in really promoting social or non-profit organizations.

In some sense, China is undergoing the same path South Korea is. Now experiencing a period of unprecedented economic growth, many poor and marginalized people on the sidelines are being forgotten. China can learn from South Korea’s experience and balance economic growth with sustainable and equitable social welfare. More emphasis should be put on social entrepreneurship rather than start-ups that can simply raise a lot of VC funding and have a big exit.

Related posts:

  1. China’s Top Angels Share With Stanford Students: How to Cooperate with China’s Investors
  2. Coffee or Tea? Or a Mix of Both? A Better Startup Environment from the Ground Up.
  3. Several Taiwan Startups Make a Splash at DEMO China


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TechNode Produces Tech Tour in 5 Cities with Zynga, Rovio, Domob and More Startups

With its vast land stretching out from the freezing far east neighboring Siberia to the roasting far north tropical islands, a 5000+ years of history, and the dynamic founder spirit spreading everywhere, China has bestowed various characters on its cities. Beijing, for example, is deemed as an inspiring combination of ancient culture and modern vigor. Shanghai, to many are the most fashionable and exquisite city in China. Hangzhou and Chengdu are known for their leisured life yet both are now revitalized with the growth of China’s Internet sector. Guangzhou, on one hand is a stronghold of manufacturing and trading, on the other hand, is still catching up with its aforementioned peers when it comes to Internet sector.

TechNode, partnering with Entrepreneur China, TechWeb as well as incubation centers and cafes around the country, will be holding a TechNode Tech Tour in May and June in the above five cities to help you better understand the local startup ecosystem in more Chinese cities. Well-established startup companies including Zynga, Rovio, DoMob, TouchPal, DeNA and Jiepang will also share their experience and insights with local startup community.

For more details on TechNode Tech Tour, please refer to http://tour.technode.com/.

 

Schedule

May 26, Shanghai

May 30, Hangzhou

June 2, Guangzhou

June 6, Chengdu

June 9, Beijing

Related posts:

  1. Dangdang.com Goes Public in Nasdaq Next Month
  2. Airbnb Is Being Copied in China, Any Chance?
  3. Sina’s LBS, WeiLingDi, targets 1 million users by June 2011


Link to full article

Kobian launches sub 4k Android Tab in India

Adding on to the list of ever-growing low–cost tablets for the growing students and masses is Kobian with its iXA Tab. The sub 4k ultra thin tab comes loaded with Android 2.3, weighs 341gm and has a resistive touch screen. Additionally, the slate is equipped with a core processor that clocks at 1GHz and packs 512MB of RAM and 4GB internal storage that can be expanded to 32GB through MicroSD. Other features include a 0.3 megapixel camera, built-in Wi-Fi.

Kobian is the company behind Mercury tablets and recently launched Mercury mTab Neo2 tablet (priced at Rs. 14,999/).

Kobian Android Tablet

Kobian Android Tablet

Kobian Android Tablet

Kobian Android Tablet

Though the tab is priced low it will see stiff competition from Ubislate 7 that has a capacitive screen. The iXA Tab begins booking from May 23, 2012 and is priced at Rs 3,999. Given the price tag it is definitely a grab on and if it comes cheaper than a mobile phone (though important to note that Ubislate 7, which is cheaper than Kobian also has SIM facility, doubling as a phone and tablet.


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